Gardens By Type

UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Vegetables in the Winter Garden

December 7, 2025
By Jacqueline Champa, UC Master Gardeners of Placer CountyFrom The Curious Gardener, Summer 2008Have you thought of having a winter vegetable garden?We are fortunate to live in Northern California where we are able to grow a number of great vegetables during the shortened, wet, cold days of winter. A good…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Perennial Vegetables

December 7, 2025
By Elaine Applebaum, UC Master Gardeners of Placer CountyQ:  I like the idea of growing my own vegetables, but it seems like a lot of work. Are there some that are easier than others?A: There is a newfound interest in growing one’s own vegetables for economic, health and environmental reasons. Many…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Maximizing Your Basil Harvest

December 7, 2025
By Trish Grenfell, UC Master Gardener of Placer CountyQ: I planted basil this spring and am unsure how many leaves I can remove without killing the plant. Will it regrow after I scalp it?A: Basil is wonderful, not only as a culinary experience, but if you place leafy bouquets in water, the spicy…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Fall Vegetables

December 7, 2025
By Laurie Meyerpeter, UC Master Gardener of Placer CountyQ: What vegetables can I plant in the fall?A: Many vegetables are best planted in either late summer or early fall for a fall or winter crop. Or the same vegetables can be planted in early spring for a crop that matures before the heat of the…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Creating a Salsa Garden

December 7, 2025
Trish Alderson, UC Master Gardeners of Placer CountyFrom The Curious Gardener, Summer 2011Chips and Salsa, anyone?? How about salsa on salad or adding salsa to a favorite dish?These are just a few examples of how we might use salsa to enhance what we eat.Salsa is a wonderful accompaniment to many dishes…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

Basic Tips for Vegetable Garden Success

December 7, 2025
Elaine Kelly Applebaum, UC Master Gardener of Placer CountyFrom The Curious Gardener, Spring 2021 Audrey Hepburn once said, “to plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow.” So perhaps it was to be expected that people around the world would take the opportunity posed by stay-at-home orders last…
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UC Master Gardeners of Placer County: Article

You Can Grow a Successful Vegetable Garden This Summer

December 6, 2025
Dorothy Volker, UC Master Gardeners of Nevada CountyFrom The Curious Gardener, Spring 2010You already know what vegetables your family likes to eat and you like knowing where and how your food is grown. You know that growing your own vegetables reduces your family’s carbon footprint and you really know…
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Growing Lettuce Year-Round

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A harvest of crisp, bright green lettuce is satisfying anytime of the year
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Lettuce is generally considered to be a cool-season annual, but with a little advanced planning and some judicious plant selection, Marin gardeners can enjoy home-grown lettuce throughout the year. Our temperate climate makes it possible to modify the growing conditions for lettuce and enable the plants to thrive in all seasons. That’s good news for salad lovers!

A harvest of crisp, bright green lettuce is satisfying anytime of the year

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Seasonal Challenges for Growing Lettuce

Lettuce grows best in 45-to-73-degree temperatures. Heat above 80 degrees causes most varieties to bolt (produce flowers) and become bitter. Temperatures below freezing often result in plant damage. Additionally, the shorter winter daylight hours slow or pause growth.

Volunteers in the Edible Demo Garden like a challenge, so learning how to grow a steady crop of lettuce in every season was an ideal project. Lettuce has become a popular crop at the Indian Valley Organic Farm & Garden. Although the success of the project was evident quantitatively in the over 260 heads of lettuce harvested since July 1, 2025, the qualitative gains, in terms of knowledge and experience, are immeasurable. Some key strategies identified for lettuce growing success include selecting the best varieties, succession planting, and managing environmental conditions.

Selecting the Best Varieties

Lettuce varieties are divided into four categories: crisphead, butterhead, looseleaf, and romaine. Crisphead is the iceberg lettuce found in grocery stores. It takes longer to develop and is difficult to grow in hot climates. It’s not a popular choice for home gardeners and is not a variety grown at the Edible Demo Garden.

Butterhead lettuce, also called bib lettuce, is more heat-tolerant. Varieties of butterhead that have thrived in the Edible Demo Garden are ‘Red Cross’ and ‘Aunt Mae’s Bibb’. Both are heat-tolerant and slow to bolt. ‘Red Cross’ has bright red and green leaves making it especially appealing in summer salads.

Loose-leaf lettuces include the “cut and come again” varieties with different leaf shapes, some described as oak leaf-shaped. They can be harvested by taking the outer leaves and leaving the central leaves to mature for future picking. ‘Smile’ is a bright green oakleaf variety that has performed particularly well in the Edible Demo Garden. Other loose-leaf varieties grown in the garden are ‘Morgana’ and ‘Bijella’. ‘Muir Summer Crisp’ is a dense, wavy-leafed variety that is exceptionally heat-tolerant and slow to bolt. 

Romaine lettuce, such as ‘Little Gem’ also grows well in the Edible Demo Garden but takes longer to mature and is not as heat-tolerant as other types. As a result, it is not as productive in the garden as the butterhead and loose-leaf varieties.

Succession Planting

Sow lettuce seeds indoors to germinate for succession planting
Sow lettuce seeds indoors to germinate for succession planting

A year-round lettuce harvest requires always having lettuce growing in different stages. That means starting seeds indoors or direct sowing in beds at the same time mature lettuce is being harvested. A volunteer day in the Edible Demo Garden might involve sowing lettuce seeds in cells to germinate in the greenhouse, planting the starts that are now ready in the garden beds, and harvesting the fully grown heads of lettuce for distribution in community-supported agriculture boxes. Intervals for succession planting vary according to the crop, but sowing seed every two weeks is about right for lettuce.

Managing Environmental Conditions

Lettuce requires proper watering and protection to thrive. Frequent, light watering is important for shallow-rooted lettuce. Too little water will stunt and toughen the plants, and too much water causes root rot. Mulching around the plants helps maintain moisture and keeps the leaves off the ground.

Lettuce seedlings need water and protection in outdoor garden beds
Lettuce seedlings need water and protection in outdoor garden beds

Protection from heat and pests can be challenging. Lettuce appreciates some shade in the summer, so planting it next to taller plants or using shade cloth can reduce the chances of it bolting. Animals and insects love lettuce too. In the Edible Demo Garden, lettuce beds are covered in protective netting to deter hungry birds, rabbits, and other critters. Mesh wire is placed under the beds to stop invasions from below. Even that didn’t prevent gophers from tunneling through the wood on the side of one of the beds and feasting on a few heads of lettuce. The protective netting also provides some shelter from the sun and flying insects. Aphids, earwigs, and slugs can still be a problem, so it pays to be vigilant and remove them as soon as they are discovered.

Click here for more information on growing lettuce:

https://ucanr.edu/site/uc-marin-master-gardeners/documents/lettuce

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UC Marin Master Gardeners
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Flowering African Violet. J. Alosi
The Real Dirt: Article

Houseplants for the Winter Months

December 1, 2025
How about bringing a new plant home to cheer up these dark winter days?  For the avid gardener, houseplants can be an excellent source of greenery and even flowers when the outside garden has gone gray and dormant in the doldrums of mid-winter.  The Moth Orchid, ZZ Plant, Christmas Cactus, Snake Plant,…
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